Mittendorff’s case offers a chilling window into the persistent harassment women encounter on a daily basis online and at work. In fact, those two forms of ugliness appear to be merging.

It means sexual harassment isn’t just lone-wolf bosses pawing at a secretary or men disparaging female co-workers at the water cooler. It can happen from a home computer and devastate a woman’s reputation and career.

The rise of cyberbullying is blamed for a sharp increase in suicides among women in this country.

It is also a sad, harsh reality in our schools and public abuse online has led to young suicides.

Pages exist on Facebook to taunt female firefirghters but the bullying does not end with women who try to serve as first responders.

At WGN television in Chicago, women who appear on the station revealed a pattern of abuse from emails, tweets and Facebook posts that attack their weight, their voices and their faces.

“Keep shoving food down that pie-hole of yours,” morning anchor Robin Baumgarten said, quoting one message. “It shuts up that annoying donkey braying noise you make when you talk.”

Columnist Petula Dvorack, who wrote about a bone marrow drive and Planned Parenthood, became a victim of online verbal abuse.

“Hey Petula, you [profanity] ugly [profanity],” wrote one poster in a Facebook message. “Too bad your mother did not have an abortion.”

That poster turned out to be an income tax specialist in Long Island.

Pregnant meteorologist Kristi Gordon of British Columbia’s Global News, got this from an anonymous viewer:

Nowhere on North America TV have we seen a weather reader so gross as you. Your front-end looks like the Hindenburg and your rear-end looks like a brick shit house.

Gordon was late in her pregnancy at the time.

Sadly, we see too much of this kind of attacks locally on Facebook posts on groups where obscenities and verbal assaults are encouraged and welcomed.

Perhaps that is why this nation currently has an obscenity-shouting, violence-promoting, hatemonger leading the race for the Republican nomination for President.

Let’s hope those responsible for turning Nicole Mittendorff’s chosen profession into a flaming nightmare are found and punished.

Their despicable behavior brought an end to a promising young life.

(The Washington Post, WUSA Channel 9 in Washington and the Chicago Tribune provided information to this report.)

Related

One Response to R.I.P. Nicole Mittendorff and damnation to cyberbullies

Hi, it is important to highlight the abuse, and bring it to the attention of the public. However, it is always one’s choice to participate in ‘social media’ (although most people who are on Facebook and the like are anti-social in face-to-face encounters). Too many people rely on approval (or lack thereof) from others. Self-esteem is the real issue here. Males have always ‘controlled’ females by a variety of means. It is up to us to let them continue. Tip #1: Don’t pay attention to them. Tip #2: Believe in yourself and your abilities. Tip #3: Don’t blame today’s problems on a person who has not been elected. 🙂